• Older adult opioid overdose death rates

    From ScienceDaily@1:317/3 to All on Tue Jan 11 21:30:36 2022
    Older adult opioid overdose death rates on the rise
    `We don't think of Baby Boomers as recreational drug users, but it's a
    growing problem'

    Date:
    January 11, 2022
    Source:
    Northwestern University
    Summary:
    A new study that analyzed 20 years of fatal opioid overdose data in
    adults 55 and older found that between 1999 and 2019, opioid-related
    overdose deaths increased exponentially in U.S. adults ages 55
    and older, from 518 deaths in 1999 to 10,292 deaths in 2019:
    a 1,886% increase.



    FULL STORY ==========================================================================
    A common stereotype for an "older adult" might include early-bird
    specials, dentures and tickets to the matinee show.


    ==========================================================================
    A new Northwestern Medicine study that analyzed 20 years of fatal
    opioid overdose data in adults 55 and older paints a much different
    picture. Between 1999 and 2019, opioid-related overdose deaths increased exponentially in U.S.

    adults ages 55 and older, from 518 deaths in 1999 to 10,292 deaths in
    2019: a 1,886% increase.

    "Many of us think drug misuse is a problem of the young. However,
    older adults are experiencing an explosion in fatal opioid overdoses,"
    said Maryann Mason, an associate professor of emergency medicine at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine.

    The findings will be published Jan. 11 in JAMA Network Open.

    "Many are Baby Boomers who, in their youth, were using recreational
    drugs and, unlike in previous generations, they've continued using into
    their older age," said senior author Lori Post, the Buehler Professor of Geriatric Medicine and professor of emergency medicine and medical social sciences at Feinberg. "That sort of flies in the face of our stereotypes
    of the 'older adult.' We don't think of them as recreational drug users,
    but it's a growing problem." In the 20-year span, 79,893 people in
    the U.S. aged 55 to 80 died by opioid overdose, with about half being
    between 55 and 64 years old, Mason said. The annual overall death rate
    per 100,000 people 55 years and up ranged from a low of 0.9 in 1999 to a
    high of 10.7 in 2019 and increased annually from 2000 on, the study found.



    ==========================================================================
    Post said ageism is one of the contributing factors for the increase
    in fatal opioid overdoses among older adults, explaining that doctors
    often don't screen for drug misuse during appointments with older people because "it doesn't fit the stereotype of what it means to be old."
    "They're invisible," Post said. "We're talking grandmas and grandpas
    doing drugs, and to the point of overdosing. We don't think of them
    seriously. Not as potential victims of domestic abuse, physical or sexual assault or drug addiction. That needs to change." African-American men experienced the largest increases in opioid overdose deaths among older
    adults since 2013, the study found. By 2019, the opioid overdose fatality
    rate among non-Hispanic Black or African-American males ages 55 and up
    was 40.03 per 100,000 population -- four times greater than the overall
    opioid fatality rate of others of the same age.

    "It's really a big question what was going on with that population that
    wasn't going on with other populations," Mason said. "It's suggestive of
    the beginning of the third wave of the opioid epidemic, when fentanyl
    began making its presence in the normal drug supply. Older Black men
    are more involved in illicit drug use, while other populations are more involved in prescription drug use." Mason noted that Black men are also
    more likely to have experienced trauma, lack access to health insurance
    and health care, don't trust health care providers and are undertreated
    for pain compared to other subpopulations of older adults.



    ==========================================================================
    The study suggested other contributing factors in the exponential increase among older adults. They could include social isolation and depression; exposure to medically prescribed opioids for chronic conditions such
    as arthritis and cancer, which increase with age; declining cognitive
    function that may interfere with taking opioids as prescribed. In
    addition, the body's ability to metabolize opioids decreases with age,
    meaning people are more vulnerable to overdose.

    "We need to inform the services that cater to older adults, such as meal- delivery or housekeeping services, about these potential issues and how
    to recognize the signs of drug misuse, like confusion, falls and asking
    for medication too often or off cycle," Post said.

    Mason pointed out that the disproportionate rates among Black men require addressing the social determinants of health that drive drug misuse in
    the first place.

    Other Northwestern authors on the paper include Dr. Howard Kim and
    Rebekah Soliman.

    Funding for the study was provided by the Buehler Center Smith Gerontology Endowment Research Fund and the Institute for Policy Research Summer Undergraduate Research Assistant Program award.

    special promotion Explore the latest scientific research on sleep and
    dreams in this free online course from New Scientist -- Sign_up_now_>>> academy.newscientist.com/courses/science-of-sleep-and-dreams ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by Northwestern_University. Original
    written by Kristin Samuelson. Note: Content may be edited for style
    and length.


    ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. Maryann Mason, Rebekah Soliman, Howard S. Kim, Lori Ann
    Post. Disparities
    by Sex and Race and Ethnicity in Death Rates Due to Opioid Overdose
    Among Adults 55 Years or Older, 1999 to 2019. JAMA Network Open,
    2022; 5 (1): e2142982 DOI: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2021.42982 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2022/01/220111112029.htm

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